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Changing Families, Changing Traditions

When there is a death, divorce or remarriage in the family, the holiday season is laden with change. Deeply embedded traditions that once defined celebrations, for some family members, are sometimes too painful to pursue. The key to changing traditions in reconfigured families is to formulate ideas, get everyone’s input and then ease into the transition.

“When there’s been a change in the family unit and the holidays are rolling around, one of the first things that pops into children’s minds is, ‘How is this year going to be different?’” says Priscilla Singleton, director of the Center for Families in Transition at the Council for Relationship, in Lionville, PA. “There’s comfort in old traditions, so to adopt new ones may elicit anxiety. Before making any changes, parents should consider which traditions are appropriate to keep, think about ones they can create and then talk with their children to get their input.”

Mother Tasha Olfus thought she had done this. From the time her son Jordan could remember, his grandfather had played a significant role in the boy’s life while his own dad Jeff, a military man, was stationed away from home. When this 8-year-old’s grandfather passed away that fall, his mother anticipated a heartbreaking holiday.

“Up to this point, my dad had been a central figure in Jordan’s holiday celebrations since Jeff was gone for most of them,” says Olfus of her now 11-year-old son. “On Thanksgiving, they would sit in their recliners and watch TV. Around Christmas, Jordan helped my dad decorate his house. On Christmas day, they would sit on the floor and play for literally hours on end.”

Contemplating her son’s sorrow, Olfus instituted some new traditions, including cutting down their own tree, letting Jordan make decorating decisions and having their first family portrait made. Even with these new events, the boy felt shortchanged.

“Mom was still grieving and didn’t want to celebrate, so we told Jordan we wouldn’t be decorating their house that year,” says Olfus. “I assumed he connected the dots and knew we weren’t going there Christmas day. But that morning after opening presents he said, ‘When are we going to Granny’s house?’ And I said, ‘We’re not.’ At that point, he started to cry. Looking back, I realize I should have spelled out how the day was going to unfold so there were no surprises.”

David Mandelbaum, a psychologist specializing in family issues, said when your children reach the appropriate age, parents shouldn’t force new holiday plans on their young ones, but should clearly communicate to children beforehand all the changes.

“Parents should make sure they understand what traditions are going to stay the same and what’s going to change,” says Mandelbaum. “If there’s resistance to new ones, ease into it. Say, ‘Let’s try it this year and see how it goes.’ This gives you the option to continue or make alterations in the future.”

Lisa Morgan Shields, mother of two, didn’t get any resistance to holiday traditions after her first husband died three years ago. In fact, it was her daughters Lexii and Katie who initiated the rituals that year.

“Thanksgiving night, the girls insisted on putting up the Christmas tree—which we never did that early—but wanted to decorate it just like they had in years’ past,” says Shields. “They also took the lead in shopping, something their dad had always done. The biggest change that year was we visited my brother in Michigan. Everyone loved the idea and thought it would be a fun adventure. But Christmas morning we felt displaced and hurting and needed to grieve.”

Singleton said not to expect the change to run smoothly, especially if the new festivities are radically different.

“Don’t expect things to run smoothly at the onset of new traditions,” says Singleton. “Older children especially may be slower to accept change and need time to grieve the loss of the once-intact family.”

Mandelbaum said the same is true for blended families.

“One of the problems with newly blended families is parents are excited about pulling everyone together and may forget that the children don’t match their level of enthusiasm,” he said. “If you’re coming from a divorced or newly married situation, continue traditions that don’t infringe on others and create new ones to bond the family together. The stepparent and stepchild may even want to do something one on one, but take the child’s lead in that.”

A fellow mother once told me, “I have come to realize that the hard choices we make as parents tend to be the right choices.” We were discussing whether or not I should send my son to school the day of the last honor roll assembly this past week.

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Birthday parties for littles can add up fast. For a few Benjamins, you can take them and a few friends to a bounce place or rent a bounce house for your backyard. We didn’t start big parties like that for my older daughter until she was about five.

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